The Right to Sovereignty
Every nation has the right to control who enters and leaves its borders. Without secure boundaries, a country loses control over its future. In the United States, this is not about politics — it’s about common sense and national stability.
How Border Issues Affect the Middle Class
When borders are open and immigration is unmanaged, the middle class pays the price. Jobs get more competitive, wages stagnate, and public services are overwhelmed. Many Americans find themselves waiting longer at hospitals, competing for school resources, and struggling with housing costs.
Public Safety and National Security
Unchecked immigration makes it easier for drug traffickers, criminals, and bad actors to enter the U.S. Border security is not anti-immigrant — it's pro-American. It ensures those coming into our country are vetted and enter legally and respectfully.
Support Legal Immigration
America was built by immigrants — but those who came legally, worked hard, and contributed to the country. We support a lawful and fair immigration process that respects our nation’s laws and protects all residents, especially the working and middle class.
Costs Passed Down to Taxpayers
Billions of dollars are spent each year on housing, food, medical care, and legal representation for illegal immigrants — all funded by the taxpayer. Middle-class Americans struggling to make ends meet shouldn't be forced to foot the bill while their own communities are neglected.
What You Can Do
Every citizen can make a difference. Contact your elected officials and demand real, lasting action on border control. Use your voice. Tell Washington to protect America first — not last.
A Borderless Nation is a Broken Nation
Without a secure border, there is no security, no order, and no future. Americans deserve better. This isn’t about race or politics — it’s about law, order, and survival. The middle class cannot thrive in chaos.
“When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.” – Benjamin Franklin